Myanmar's renewable energy vision 2021

Page 17

MYANMAR’S ELECTRICITY PLANS IN ITS NDC With the business-as-usual plans of 23.594GW by 2030, based on the National Electricity Master Plan (2014), Myanmar has made slight changes to its energy-mix plans in its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) and as a part of its commitments to the Paris Agreement.

Under the unconditional targets Myanmar will decrease the share of coal by 54.4% (4.32GW) by 2030. However with international support, Myanmar intends to decrease the share of coal by 73.29% (5.82GW) by 2030 compared to business-as-usual targets.

Table 2: Business-as-usual Energy-Mix Plan by 2030

The share of new renewables under the unconditional targets will remain the same as business-as usual, but under conditional targets, the share of renewables will increase by 53.5% (1.07GW). With the socio-environmental issues related to hydropower and also given the intermittent characteristics of the new renewable technologies, Myanmar intends to: substantially decrease the share of hydropower by 42.04% (3.74GW) under unconditional targets and by 36.19% (3.22GW) under conditional targets; limitedly scale up renewable energy technologies; and increase the share of natural gas and LNG by 27.42% (1.305GW) under both unconditional and conditional target scenarios.

Generation Technology

MW

Capacity Factor

MW (%)

RE: (Hydro)

8,896

RE: Other (Solar & Wind)

2,000

Coal / Thermal

7,940

0.8

4,758

0.8

Gas Total

Efficiency

38% 9%

23,594

33%

45%

20%

60%

100%

Based on current energy supply and demand scenarios, Myanmar now aspires to achieve over 18GW by 2030 in the new energy-mix targets, compared to the business-as-usual plans of 23.594GW. In the new target the share of coal in the energy-mix substantially decreases and has the potential to decrease still further based on the availability of international support. Myanmar therefore has set two targets in its NDC for the energy sector – unconditional targets and conditional targets. Table 3: Unconditional Energy-Mix Targets by 2030 2020 Generation Technology RE: Hydro

MW

2025 %

MW

2030 %

MW

%

2,771

46.5%

3,388

31%

5,156

28%

RE: Other (Solar & Wind)

40

0.7%

1,440

13.%

2,000

11%

Natural Gas / LNG

3,031

50.8%

5,031

46%

6,063

33%

120

2%

720

6.5%

3,620

20%

-

-

400

3.5%

1,400

8%

5,962

100%

10,979

100%

18,239

100%

Coal Intl. Interconnection Total

Table 4: Conditional Energy-Mix Targets by 2030 2020 Generation Technology RE: Hydro RE: Other (Solar & Wind) Natural Gas / LNG Coal Intl. Interconnection Total

MW

2025 %

MW

MW

%

46.5%

3,388

32%

5,676

31%

40

0.7%

1,680

15.83%

3,070

17%

3,031 50.8%

6,962

The NDC also outlines the need for nearly US$1.2 billion to address policy, technical analysis, capacity building, improving energy efficiency and blending finance to de-risk investments in renewables. Thus, with these investments coming in, Myanmar will be able to avoid 105.25 million tCO2e by 2030 under unconditional targets and 144.04 million tCO2e by 2030 under conditional targets based on the business-as-usual emissions of 297.01 million tCO2e by 2030.

2030 %

2,771

120

Storage or Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) offer solutions to overcome the intermittent quality of the new renewable energy technologies. With renewable energies and storage also becoming cheaper, the deployment and demonstration of the combination of such technologies together will be key to ensure the rapid phasing out of fossil fuel based technologies, which will in turn help avoid or reduce GHG emissions. To make this a reality, Myanmar will need international technical and financial support as soon as possible, including support to overcome policy barriers to create the right environment for the deployment of new renewables.

5,031

47.37%

6,063

33%

2%

120

1.1%

2,120

11%

-

400

3.7%

1,400

8%

100% 10,619

100%

18,329

100%

Under the unconditional targets (18.239GW), Myanmar intends to mobilize domestic resources. Under conditional targets (18.329GW), Myanmar expects international assistance to meet energy targets set to avoid CO2 emissions.

Moreover, despite existing renewable energy targets in the NDC, Myanmar has also identified potential renewable energy projects (solar and wind) including hydro (though it must be executed in a socio-environmentally sensitive way) for the further scaling-up of clean energy. However, pre-feasibility and feasibility assessments are pending and currently not addressed in the NDC as part of the targets. This is also complemented by the fact that Myanmar intends to peak its share of coal targets by 2030 and will proceed to slowly phase out coal by 2050, which means the identified projects need to progress as soon as possible to understand this goal`s feasibility, economy and deployment. Ugan Manandhar, WWF

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